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Journal article

Clinical challenges in patients with cancer-associated thrombosis: Canadian expert consensus recommendations

Abstract

Venous thromboembolism is a common complication in cancer patients, and thromboembolism is the second most common cause of death after cancer progression. A number of clinical practice guidelines provide recommendations for the management of cancer-associated thrombosis. However, the guidelines lack recommendations covering commonly encountered clinical challenges (for example, thrombocytopenia, recurrent venous thromboembolism, etc.) for which little or no evidence exists. Accordingly, recommendations were developed to provide expert guidance to medical oncologists and other health care professionals caring for patients with cancer-associated thrombosis. The current expert consensus was developed by a team of 21 clinical experts. For each identified clinical challenge, the literature in medline, embase, and Evidence Based Medicine Reviews was systematically reviewed. The quality of the evidence was assessed, summarized, and graded. Consensus statements were generated, and the experts voted anonymously using a modified Delphi process on their level of agreement with the various statements. Statements were progressively revised through separate voting iterations and were then finalized. Clinicians using these recommendations and suggestions should tailor patient management according to the risks and benefits of the treatment options, patient values and preferences, and local cost and resource allocations.

Authors

Carrier M; Lazo-Langner A; Shivakumar S; Tagalakis V; Gross PL; Blais N; Butts CA; Crowther M

Journal

Current Oncology, Vol. 22, No. 1, pp. 49–59

Publisher

MDPI

Publication Date

February 1, 2015

DOI

10.3747/co.22.2392

ISSN

1198-0052

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